Chuyện nước Mỹ 5
(5-15-20022)
A/ - Nữ giới ở Mỹ có cuộc sống tình dục buông thả. Hội Parenthood lo việc phá thai
Abortion is legal. It's still your
right.
https://www.plannedparenthood.org/
Cơ quan Parenthood Có dịch vụ làm giàu vì các thai nhi, như được mô tả bởi "The dark side of Planned Parenthood".
https://www.mymetmedia.com/the-dark-side-of-planned-parenthood/
Những người theo đảng Cộng-Hòa (CH) không muốn có tình trạng này. Họ có hy-vọng chiếm được đa số tại lưỡng viện quốc-hội vào tháng 11 này. vị vậy hai thống đốc Texas, và Florida đã ra luật cấm phá thai ở tiểu-bang của mình. Ông Abbott cấm phá khi thai nhi được 6 tuần. Ông DeSantis cấm khi thai nhi được 15 tuần.
1/
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/05/18/texas-heartbeat-bill-abortions-law/
Gov. Greg Abbott signs into law one of nation’s strictest abortion
measures, banning procedure as early as six weeks into a pregnancy
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/05/18/texas-heartbeat-bill-abortions-law/
Những người muốn tự-do phá thì phản đối:
Demonstrators gathered in front of the
Governor's Mansion in Austin to protest against Senate Bill 8, an anti-abortion
bill that Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law this morning. Credit: Evan L'Roy/The
Texas Tribune
2/
https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/14/politics/desantis-signs-abortion-ban-florida/index.html
DeSantis signs Florida's 15-week abortion
ban into law tương tự như TB Mississipi. Đây là tiểu-bang CH cuối cùng áp dụng luật 15 tuần
By Steve Contorno, CNN Updated 1:26 PM ET, Thu April 14, 2022
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds up a 15-week abortion ban law after signing it, Thursday, April 14, 2022, in Kissimmee, Fla.
Steve Contorno: Florida Politics Reporter at CNN
Vấn đề phá và cấm không hề dễ dàng như tắt/bật contact điện các đồ dùng trong nhà. Bài báo sau phân tích những khó khăn khi phải phá trong những trường hợp cho phép:
a/ Có thai làm nguy-hiểm đến tính mạng người mẹ,
b/ Thai nhi không bình-thường được giấy xác nhận của 2 bác-sĩ.
Your OB-GYN might miss out on critical training in a
post-Roe world
Photo
illustration: Mae Decena. Sources: Michael Burrell/Anna Ohanesian/Getty Images
Performing abortions and caring for miscarriages use many of the same
skills. Many doctors won’t get those lessons.
Jonathan Lambert, Public Health Reporter, Alex Leeds Matthews, Data
Visualization Reporter
May 10, 2022
Jonathan Lambert, Public Health Reporter; is a public health reporter for Grid focused on how science, policy and the environment shape our collective well-being.
Alex Leeds Matthews, Data Visualization Reporter; data visualization
reporter at Grid.
1/ Abortion training for doctors
Nearly half of all OB-GYN residency programs are in states that are likely or certain to ban abortion if Roe v. Wade is overturned. Circles are sized by the number of OB-GYN residency programs in that state.
Training
can take anywhere from a couple of weeks to months and covers more than just
abortions. Residents also learn how to manage miscarriages and other pregnancy
complications.
“If physicians don’t have the training to do these types of [non-abortion] emergencies, you’re going to have unsafe situations and complications,” said Scott Sullivan, an obstetrician-gynecologist and leader on the Council on Resident Education in Obstetrics and Gynecology. “We think more people are going to die because of these rules, which is horrifying.”
Dr. Scott Sullivan joined MUSC Women's Care as a maternal fetal medicine
specialist in 2006.
2/ The scramble has already started
The situation in Texas — which effectively banned abortion training last September — offers a preview of the challenges to come. The Ryan Residency in Training Program: https://www.ryanprogram.org/, which supports residency programs in providing abortion training across the country, scrambled to connect medical residents in Texas with programs in other states. “It was a big logistical match program,” said Jema Turk, director of evaluation for the program.
Jema Turk:
Director of Evaluation at UCSF Bixby Center for Global
Reproductive Health
3/ A diminished reproductive care workforce
OB/GYN residents will get ‘second-rate’ education if
abortions are banned
Written by Danielle Chiriguayo, produced by Bennett Purser May. 11, 2022
Performing abortions and caring for miscarriages use many of the same
skills. Many doctors won’t get those lessons.
Jonathan Lambert, Public Health Reporter, Alex Leeds Matthews, Data
Visualization Reporter
“One
of the impacts of [an abortion ban] in these states that have restrictions and
have restrictions on training [is that] they will get lesser quality applicants
and lesser quality faculty,” says Utah OB/GYN David Turok.
Photo
by Shutterstock.
Learning how to perform an abortion is an
essential part of an OB/GYN’s medical training. But nearly half of all U.S.
OB/GYN residency programs are in states that could ban them if Roe v. Wade
falls. And if states outlaw the procedure, it’ll no longer be taught.
Dr. David Turok is an OB/GYN in Salt Lake City, Utah — a state where
abortions could soon be restricted due to its trigger law: https://www.kcrw.com/news/shows/press-play-with-madeleine-brand/housing-roe-wade/utah-abortion-access-trigger-law, with exceptions only for
rape, incest, and saving the life of the mother.
Credits
Guest:
Dr.
David Turok - OB/GYN in Salt Lake City
Host:
Madeleine
Brand
Producers:
Sarah Sweeney, Angie Perrin, Michell
Eloy, Amy Ta, Brian Hardzinski, Bennett Purser, Marcelle Hutchins
Danielle Chiriguayo is an award-winning journalist born and raised in LA. As digital news producer, she works to bridge the gap between broadcast and digital by adapting radio content for other platforms and through original multimedia reporting.
Bennett Purser joined KCRW's Press Play in
2020 as a lucky producer who found a job during the COVID-19 pandemic and
recession. Before joining the station, he spent two years as a producer for
APM's Marketplace, covering business and economics. He started his journalism
career at Utah Public Radio, and moved to Los Angeles in 2018 to intern for
NPR's Morning Edition. In his free time he likes traveling, concerts, live
storytelling and rollerblading on the strand.
B/- Empty shelves
and hungry kids: The U.S. baby formula shortage is a crisis
A mother feeds her baby using a bottle. Yuri Arcurs peopleimages.com/Getty Images/iStockphoto
Several shelves of baby formula are nearly empty at a Walmart in Charles Town, West Virginia, on April 28. (Esther Lee)
A sign warns customers to limit baby formula purchases
due to shortages at a Walmart in Charles Town, West Virginia, on April 28.
(Esther Lee)
C/- President
Biden Nominates Sarah Bloom Raskin to Serve as Vice Chair for Supervision of
the Federal Reserve, and Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson to Serve as Governors
Sarah Bloom Raskin is an American attorney and regulator, who served as the 13th United States deputy secretary of the treasury from 2014 to 2017 and as a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System from 2010 to 2014.
Lisa DeNell Cook is an American economist who is a professor of economics
and international relations at Michigan State University and a member of the
American Economic Association's Executive Committee. In 2022, she was elected
to the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
Thượng Viện Mỹ chuẩn thuận phụ nữ da đen đầu tiên vào Fed
Philip Nathan Jefferson is vice president for academic affairs, dean of the
faculty, and Paul B. Freeland professor of economics at Davidson College. He
was previously Centennial Professor of Economics at Swarthmore College, a research
economist for the Federal Reserve, and a professor at Columbia University.
Phụ Lục:
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Rules
Texas high court says governor cannot order transgender child
investigations
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